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PRP injection associated with lower healthcare use and costs versus lumbar surgery for DDD in retrospective studyFor back pain, could an injection be a simpler, cheaper path than surgery?

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Key Takeaway
Consider PRP's association with lower costs and utilization in selected DDD patients, but note observational limitations.

This retrospective observational cohort study analyzed linked commercial insurance claims and a national orthobiologic treatment registry. The study included 133 adults with lumbar degenerative disc disease (DDD) receiving platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injection (with or without bone marrow aspirate concentrate) compared with 2,560 patients undergoing lumbar fusion, and 198 PRP patients compared with 3,960 patients undergoing lumbar decompression procedures (LFDF). All patients met criteria for these surgical procedures. The primary outcome was spine-related healthcare resource use and aggregate costs at 12 and 24 months, with exploratory analyses at 36 and 48 months.

Patients receiving PRP had lower rates of subsequent spine surgery through 24 months (below reporting thresholds). They also showed lower rates of postoperative imaging, home health services, and outpatient visits compared with surgical cohorts. No consistent differences were found for opioid use, magnetic resonance imaging, or physical therapy. Mean aggregate costs at 12 and 24 months were significantly higher for both fusion and LFDF cohorts across most costing methods compared to the PRP group.

Safety and tolerability data were not reported. Key limitations include selection bias, absence of patient-reported outcomes, and reliance on claims-based severity measures. The study's retrospective observational design prevents causal conclusions. The findings suggest PRP may be associated with reduced healthcare utilization and costs in selected patients with lumbar DDD, but these results should be interpreted cautiously given the methodological constraints.

When your back hurts from worn-out discs, the path forward can feel daunting. A new look at insurance data suggests there might be a less intensive option worth discussing with your doctor. For adults who were candidates for major spine surgery, those who got a platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injection instead had significantly lower medical bills and needed fewer follow-up scans and home health visits over the next two years. The data also showed very few people who got the injection needed spine surgery later on.

This study compared hundreds of patients who got PRP injections with thousands who underwent either spinal fusion or decompression procedures. It tracked their healthcare use and costs for up to two years. The key finding was that the costs for the surgery groups were consistently and substantially higher.

It's important to understand what this study can and can't tell us. Because it looked back at existing records, it can't prove the injection caused the lower costs or was as effective at relieving pain. The researchers didn't have data on how patients actually felt—only what care they used. The people who got the injection were likely different from those who had surgery in ways the data couldn't capture. This means the results are a promising signal, not a final answer.

What this means for you:
For some back pain, an injection was linked to much lower costs than surgery, but pain relief wasn't measured.

Study Details

Study typeCohort
Sample sizen = 133
EvidenceLevel 3
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Background Lumbar fusion and decompression procedures are widely used for degenerative spine conditions but are associated with substantial health care costs and variable outcomes. Orthobiologic treatments, including platelet rich plasma (PRP) and bone marrow aspirate concentrate (BMAC), have emerged as less invasive options for select patients who meet surgical criteria. However, concerns remain that orthobiologic care may delay rather than avert surgery, potentially increasing downstream utilization and costs. Comparative evidence on real world utilization and costs is limited. Methods We conducted a retrospective, observational study using linked commercial insurance claims and a national orthobiologic treatment registry. Adults with lumbar degenerative disc disease (DDD) who met criteria for lumbar fusion or laminectomy, foraminotomy, discectomy, and facetectomy (LFDF) procedures, and who received PRP injection (with or without BMAC) or surgery between 2016 and 2023 were included. Two comparisons were evaluated: PRP versus lumbar fusion and PRP versus lumbar decompression procedures. Propensity score matching was used to balance cohorts on demographic characteristics, comorbidities, spine related diagnoses, prior health care use, and severity proxies. Outcomes included spine-related health care resource use and aggregate costs at 12 and 24 months, with exploratory analyses at 36 and 48 months. Costs were estimated using multiple approaches, including Medicare based estimates and commercial payer methods. Results After matching, 133 patients receiving PRP were compared with 2,560 patients undergoing fusion, and 198 patients receiving PRP were compared with 3,960 patients undergoing LFDF. Rates of subsequent spine surgery following PRP were low and below cell suppression thresholds through 24 months, with similar findings in exploratory longer-term analyses. Compared with surgical cohorts, patients receiving PRP had lower rates of postoperative imaging, home health services, and outpatient visits, with no consistent differences in opioid use, magnetic resonance imaging, or physical therapy. At 12 and 24 months, mean aggregate costs were significantly higher for fusion and LFDF cohorts across most costing methods. Cost differences were largest for fusion comparisons and were driven primarily by index procedure costs and higher reoperation and imaging rates in surgical cohorts. Findings were generally consistent across sensitivity and exploratory analyses. Conclusions Among select patients with degenerative spine conditions who meet surgical criteria, PRP was associated with lower health care utilization and substantially lower costs compared with lumbar fusion or LFDF, without evidence of increased progression to surgery. These findings support consideration of orthobiologic options for appropriately selected patients when surgery is not the only viable treatment option. Limitations include selection bias, absence of patient reported outcomes, and claims-based severity measures.
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